ARTICLE
Stable Behavioral Inhibition and Its Association with Anxiety Disorder

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Abstract

“Behavioral inhibition to the unfamiliar‘’ is a temperamental construct reflecting the tendency to be shy, timid, and constrained in novel situations. Previous work has suggested that it may be associated with anxiety disorders in children. Psychopathology was assessed in children from a nonclinical sample originally identified as behaviorally inhibited or uninhibited at 21 months and followed through 7½ years. Children who remained inhibited at 4, 5½ and 7½ years (Stable Inhibited) had higher rates of anxiety disorders than children who were not consistently inhibited. Their parents had higher rates of multiple childhood anxiety disorders and of continuing anxiety disorder. These results suggest that the association between behavioral inhibition and anxiety disorder is accounted for by children who have stable behavioral inhibition. J. Am. Acad. Child Adolesc. Psychiatry, 1992, 31, 1:103–111.

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    The authors would like to thank Michelle Gersten, Ed.D., and Susan R. Meminger, Ph.D., for their assistance with this project.

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